Liberia has long used commemorative dollar issues as a revenue stream rather than circulating currency, licensing designs to private mints — primarily in Europe — with the coins sold directly to collectors and never intended for domestic use. This piece follows that pattern exactly.
The New Deal reference places the subject in the 1933–1939 federal programs under Roosevelt, a period increasingly revisited in political discourse as deficit spending and government intervention have returned to mainstream debate.
Liberia has long used commemorative dollar issues as a revenue stream rather than circulating currency, licensing designs to private mints — primarily in Europe — with the coins sold directly to collectors and never intended for domestic use. This piece follows that pattern exactly.
The New Deal reference places the subject in the 1933–1939 federal programs under Roosevelt, a period increasingly revisited in political discourse as deficit spending and government intervention have returned to mainstream debate.